Tuesday. November 14. 1978 The Daily Tar Heel 3
Heels finish season 12-3-4
CaoimpnQS CaDeoiidlair
Pjtc wrvte announcement must be turned in at the box outside the OTH off ices in the Carolina Union
by 1 p.m. N they are to run the next day. Each item will be run at least twice.
Plenty off defense but little corarig for hooters
Sfei:v::::'.::::;::::::;si
ACTIVITIES TODAY
The International Association of Student in Economics
and Biatincca Management will hold a general meeting at 3:30
p.m. in Room 204 New Carroll Hall. Present members and in
terested persons are invited to intend.
. There will be a meeting at 5:30 p.m. in the hospital cafeteria
for any Outing Club members interested in discussing equip
ment purchases for this year. ,
The Outing Club will meet at 7 p.m. in Forest Theater, with
a program on marshmallow roasting. In the event of rain, it
will be in the Carolina Union. -
Ckapd HBI ECOS will show -anger Radioactive Waste"
at 8 p.m. in Room I0I Greenlaw Hall.
Henderson Lecture Series presents Dr. Brenda DcVellis
speaking on "Issues in Sex Education" at 7:30 p.m. in Connor
Dorm lounge. Reception following lecture in Alexander
Dorm lounge.
The Campus Christian r etlowsMp will hold the third part of
its monthly discussion of "The Christian Family" at 7 p.m. at
204 Glcnburnie Street. Anyone needing a ride may meet in the
Carolina Union at 6:45 p.m.
"The 5 1st State" is the topic Tor original speech night at Di
Phi literary Societies at 7.30 p.m. in 300 New West.
Mandatory WXYC general staff meeting at 7:30 p.m. in
Room 103 Bingham Hall. All persons working in any aspect of
WXYC must attend or call Gary' Davis. 933-7768.
A gay issues forum discussing "Homosexuality and the
Christian Faith: A Refreshing Perspective" will meet at 7:30
p.m. at the UCC. Dixie Trail and Wade Avenue. Raleigh. For
more info call 929-8843 or 967-9626.
THREA DS T-shirts will he silk-screened between 1 2:30 and
1:30 p.m. in the main lounge, first floor. Graham Memorial
Hall. T-shirts must be provided. Sponsored by PRC.
"Distant Thunder." a film on India and its fight for food will
be shown as part of the Hunger Action Committee Food
Week Program at 9 p.m. in the Carolina Union's second floor
lounge.
A ED will meet at 7 p.m. in Room 103 Berryhill Hall. The
speaker will be Dr. Boeckelheidc on "Women in Medicine."
"Options in Education." Schools That Work, part two at 8
p.m. on WUNC radio (91.5 FM).
The three-screen media presentation. "Women and the Un
iversity," will be shown at 7 p.m. in Room 010 Peabody Hall at
the Association of Women Students meeting. All interested
persons are invited.
The Department of Speech Communication is having a
Reading Hour featuring Speech 41 students at 5 p.m. in Toy
Lounge, fourth floor. Dey Hall. Reception for undergraduate
speech communication majors will be held immediately
following Reading Hour. - - '.
The LNC Campus Y Big Buddy Program will have a man
datory workshop for all members at 7 p.m. in the second floor
lounge of the Y. Representatives from Orange County Social
Services will speak and important program material will be
distributed.
The Chapel Hiil-Carrboro Chapter of N ARAL (National
Abortion Rights Action League) will have an organizational
meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the Villages Apartment's Club House.
Smith Level Road. All interested people are invited to attend.
The Table Tennis Club will meet at 7 p.m. in the new Tin
Can. Regular play will be organized with a 78-79 ranking of
each player. Those who do not care to participate in the
"ladder" are also welcome. Dues will be collected in the general
meeting.
The Carolina Chapter of Phi Delta Kappa, an honorary
educational fraternity, in cooperation with the School of
Education, invites the public to attend the first lecture by Dr.
William B. Ware, professor of education, in a series of lectures
to memorialize the former Dean of Education. Dr. Ira J. Gor
don, at 8 p.m. in Room 08 Peabody Hall. These lectures will be
known as the "Ira J. Gordon Lectures in Educational
Research." A reception will follow the lecture.
"Gay Presence at the Hospital Lunch" will be presented at
12:30 p.m. in Room 202 Berryhill Hall lounge.
The UNC Music Department continues its Tuesday Even
ing Series with a concert for clarinet, piano and violin at 8 p.m.
in Hill Hall auditorium. The free, public concert will feature
Judy Benedict. Scott Bridges and Jane Whang.
Dr. Weldon Thornton, chairperson of the academic review
committee of the College of Arts and Sciences, will be the
featured speaker at the monthly luncheon meeting of the
Faculty Club at 12:30 p.m. at the Carolina inn. His topic will
be: "Curriculum Review and the Change on the University
Campus."
The Margaret Kalp Memorial Lecture in Library Science
will be delivered by Dr. Frances Henne. professor emerita of
the Columbia University School of Library Service at 7:30
p.m. in the ballroom of the Carolina Inn. Dr. Henne will speak
on school library media programs. -
Prospective students for the Evening College are invited to
attend an informal orientation meeting at noon and 7 p.m. in
Room 202 Abernethy Hall. Admissions and registration
procedures, types of programs and kinds of courses offered
will be discussed. Application deadlines for enrolling in even
ing or day spring semester courses are Nov. 30 for un
dergraduate courses and Dec. 8 for graduate courses. Students
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currently enrolled in the l venni! C ollege may pre-rcjsister H
appointment. Nov. 30-)cc. 10. in Room 214 Ahcrnelhy Hall.
Call 933-1134 for an appointment '
A physical chemistry scminai ill feature Marth Sarasua of '
UNC speaking on "Mathematical Models for Neural
Transmission'' al II a.m. in Room 30K Venable Hall.
I'PI'OMIM; r.VKNTS
The N.C". Coastal Club will meet at 5 p.m. Wednesday in the
South Gallery l ounge of the C arolina I'nion. All members
please attend.
Come sec I'M' play Duke in water polo ;it H:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the indoor pool
The VW Ski Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in
Room 217 Carolina Union. Bnnj! a check tor dues. Sign-uns '
for KHIiniJton. It ah. Sugar and Beech arc in progress.
A food service committee meeting at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday
in the Krank Porter Ciraham I onnge.
R.J. Serflin of Florida Stale I niversity will sneak "On I n
iform Consistency Rates and Applications in Nonparametric
Density Estimation" al 4 p.m Wednesday in Room 324
Phillips Hall.
, ' The English Department will nonsor a book signing for
Daphne Athas. honoring the publication of her new book
Cr at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Bull's Head Bookshop
and UNC Student Stores.
If you enjoy good music, come hear the choruses perform at
4 p.m. Wednesday in the Hill Hall Auditorium.
The Linguistics C ircle will hold its 1978 Fall Colloquium at
I p.m. Wednesday in Tov Lounge on the fourth floor of Dev
Hall.
Peter J. Wagner of Michigan State University will speak on
"Conformations! Limitations on Photoreactivity" at 1 1 a.m.
Wednesday in Room 30X Venable Hall.
Gerald Lucovsky of the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center
will speak on "Vibrational Properties of Network Amorphous '
Solids" at 12 p.m. Wednesday in Room 265 Phillips Hall.
U. Wille of Hahn-Mcitner-lnMitut. Berlin. Germany will
speak on the "Theory of C otlision Broadening in Molecular
Orbital X-Ray Spectra" at 1 1 a m. Wednesday in Room 227
Phillips Hall.
I. Lefkowtb of the Army Research Office and UNC-C'H will
speak on "High Tc Superconductivity: Exciton's 'Low Mode
Ferroelectrkity and the CuC I Problem" at 4 p.m. Wednesday
in Room 265 Phillips Hall.
The First Collegiate Bassntasters will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday in Room 327 Ehringhaus Dorm.
The Science Fiction and Fantasy Club will meet at 7 p.m.
Wednesday in Room 308 Alumni Hall.
Interested in a career vacation that combines the excitement
of living abroad with working in your specialized field? The
International Association for the Exchange of Students for
Technical Experience organization coordinates on-the-job
training in one of 46 countries lor students of architecture,
agriculture, mathematics and the sciences. A representative
from the IAESTE organization will he on campus from 10:30
am.-noon Wednesday to answer questions. Interested
students should come by the International Center. Bynum
Hall basement, during that time
-ITEMS O t -1 NT KR EST
Students may register for the ACC Basketball Tournament
Lottery through Thursday. Sign-up tables will be open each
day from 9 a.m. to S p.m. in the Carolina Union lobby. I ahlcs
: will also be open at the Law School ( 1 1 a.m. to 3 p.m. on I ucs
day). Med. School ( 1 1 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Wednesday), and at
the Y-Court (9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on I hursday). You must show
your ID and Athletic Pass.
Omega Psi Phi Fraternity is having its annual canned food
drive for needy families. Please contribute all canned goods.
Boxes will be placed at various points on campus.
Singing telegrams will he delivered by the pledge class of
Kappa Kappy Gamma Sorority on Nov.- 19. and 20. Order
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Tuesday through Friday at the Carolina
Union or the Y-Court. Sixty percent of the proceeds w ill goto
the Chapel Hill "Meals on" Wheels."
Applications are being accepted lor the position of educa
tion director and news director ill WXYC FM-89. See the
bulletin board at WXYC for more details or call Gary Davis,
station manager, at 942-4745.
By BILL FIELDS
Staff Writer
Defense, defense and more defense
the Tar Heel soccer team had plenty ol
that this season.
Goals, goals and fewer goals UNC
also found out that a good defense will
not pull a team through every time.
It was a lack of scoring punch which
kept UNC from posting a record better
than the 1 2-3-4 record it finished with and
which kept the far Heels out of the
NCAA playoffs. Add that record to last
' season's mark and Coach Anson
Dorrance is 26-6-5 for his first two years
as coach. ....
Carolina closed its year last Saturday
with a 2-1 win over Davidson, a game
typical of the soccer Carolina played all
season since opening on the road against
UNC-Charlotte in early September. Lots
of good defense, scrappy play in the
midfield, hustling play on the front line,
capable play from the goalie - Carolina
got all of that this season.
The Tar Heels got everything but goals.
Only twice did UNC explode offensively.
Pfeiffer was the victim when Carolina
went on a 10-goal rampage, and East
Carolina caught the worst end of a 7-0
shutout
But both of those games came late in
the season after a number of low-scoring
and even scoreless contests, in which just
one goal would have been enough for a
Carolina win. Scoreless ties against
Guilford. Appalachian State, Lynchburg
and Clemson dot UNC's record.
To the Tar Heel's credit, all four
scoreless games were against top-ranked
teams. Guilford and Lynchburg rank
high in the small college division.
Clemson and ASU hold national soccer
reputations.
So it wasn't the ties, but the three losses
which kept Carolina from a first-place tie
with the Tigers for the ACC
championship and an NCAA
tournament bid.
UNC-Wilmington (a 4-1 winner).
Duke (1-0). and Old Dominion (1-0)
sealed Carolina's fate of being a runner
up in the ACC and a spectator of post
season action. The UNC-W loss came
early in the year, and the Tar Heels were
1
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Senior Steve Scott led Carolina in scoring with eight goals
not hurt as badly by that one. But losing
to Duke killed the AC C chances, and Old
Dominion decided it wanted to be in the
NCAA playoffs itself.
It was an interesting year." Dorrance
said after the Davidson game. "It was a
difficult year, though, because of the
injuries."
Ah, injuries. Soccer teams are
supposed to get fewer and less serious
ones than football teams, but Dorrance
might argue that one.
First. Dick Drayton, a star on the 1977
team, did not even suit up for a single
game. A severe knee injury kept him out.
A knee injury hit Billy Propster early in
the year and he watched from the
sidelines.
Chris Brown, a sophomore, developed
calcium deposits in his thigh and saw
limited action early. Brow n is red-shirted,
and has an extra year of eligibility.
But Martin Trimble has no extra year
left.Trimble. a senior w ho was All-ACC
goalie his first three years, also fell victim
to calcium deposits. He went out after the
fourth game, and saw his last action in the
second half of the Pfeiffer rout. "It was
tough on him." Dorrance said. "He knew
he wouldn't get back in. but he stuck with
us. came to practice everyday."
It was also a disappointing season for
Sean Naber. He never could get things
going like he did last year when he led the
team in scoring. Naber. too. was injured,'
receiving a shoulder separation against
ASU. He was nagged with other minor
injuries as was most of the UNC team.
"We were in a constant state, of flux,"
Dorrance said. "I admire the players.
They didn't know who would be starting
week by week."
In between the injuries and around the
ties and discounting the losses. Tar Heel
soccer had plenty of bright moments.
Senior Steve Scott played the best
soccer of 4iis four-year career and led the
team with eight goals. "I just wish I could
play for a couple of more years," he said
after his final game.
Seniors Roy Baroff. Ed Fenimore and
Cooper Osborne played well in the
midfield and the backline. Baroffs play
was recognized bv the Most Valuable
Player award in the Mayor's Cup
tournament early in the season.
, Osborne, until the final game, had not
seen a goal scored while he was on the
field. Dorrance often called his feat one of
the most notable on the team.
Fenimore anchored the defense at the
sweeper position. He, Baroff, Scott and
Trimble were four-year starters. "They
made the difference in the close" games,"
Dorrance said of the group.
The remaining two seniors. Butch
Bernard and Tom Cope, didn't play very
much, but Bernard scored three times,
including one in his final game.
H ow about next year ? "It's going to be
hard to replace the seniors," Dorrance
said. "We should be good. We have a lot
of good people coming back, and the
jayvee team was good this year."
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